YouTube On Monday, Tweet On Friday: Ads Mistimed

If timing is everything, brands using digital media are in trouble. While Facebook users are most likely to interact with brands between 10 p.m. and midnight, companies typically launch
social campaigns between 11 a.m. and noon. And while YouTube aficionados are most likely to be exploring brand messages on a Monday, that is retailers’ least favorite day.

Those insights are from Yesmail Interactive, which recently released an in-depth analysis of 20 major retail brands to assess how successfully they are aligning their digital marketing
efforts.

The answer? Not very well, Michael Fisher, president of Yesmail, tells Marketing Daily. And there’s a significant disconnect between the way potential
customers engage with digital media messages and the way campaigns are currently planned. “When you don’t pay attention to timing and the way campaigns reinforce one another, you get lower
levels of engagement,” he says. “And less is more. If brands would focus smaller and more refined messages to smaller audiences, they’d often get better results.”

Among the brands included in the analysis are Abercrombie & Fitch, American Eagle, Ann Taylor, The Gap, H&M, J Crew, Ralph Lauren and Urban Outfitters. The research tracks each
retailer's Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and email campaigns over a three-month period to evaluate how effective they are in driving consumer engagement.

The day of the week
emerges as a big consideration, he says. Facebook campaigns achieve the highest level of engagement on Tuesdays, even though it ranks fourth in terms of when campaigns are deployed. Most brands launch
Twitter efforts on Friday, despite its being the least engaging day. Timing is also essential: More than 84% of Twitter campaigns occur within regular work hours, even though 5-8 a.m. EST is the
time frame with the highest level of customer engagement.

It also finds that integrating campaign efforts boosts engagement levels. For example, when an email campaign is deployed
the same day as a Facebook effort, it boosts Facebook engagement by 50%. And when two campaigns are used the same day, engagement rises 100%. One email campaign timed with a Twitter effort raises
engagement 35%, and two increases it by 50%.

Another finding, he says, is that companies are not sharing best practices across all brands, with Old Navy, the Gap and Banana Republic
all following different playbooks.

It’s also clear that video is underused, despite its growing popularity among consumers, “and it’s a major opportunity for
engagement, especially on Facebook. Time of day, day of week, targeted audience, and content format all matter, and play a big role in every one of those channels. Many brands just aren’t doing
their homework.”

Great article! It’s a pretty tough quandary: those running social media campaigns for brands are clearly doing so within regular work hours. Unfortunately, users are at work, not on Twitter or Facebook, during those hours. It doesn’t help that constant Twitter updates make it near impossible for someone to look at Tweets from just 30 minutes ago.
That’s why it’s so important to take the time and see what Tweets/ Facebook posts garner the most attention and how time plays a role in that. Mapping out a strategy will ensure social media efforts are not wasted and get brands the attention they deserve.
Still, it’s a huge project to undertake, which is why PM Digital has a whole team dedicated to increasing social media presence. So in case you need a hand, email us at info@pmdigital.com and learn more about our social media services here: http://www.pmdigital.com/our_services/social_media/